When Michelle Trachtenberg was a young girl growing up in
Sheepshead Bay, she dreamed of being a championship ice skater
like her childhood idols, Michelle Kwan and Oksana Baiul.

"I took one lesson and said, ’I’m going back to acting,’"
Trachtenberg told GO Brooklyn with a laugh in a phone interview
last week.

It was probably the correct choice, since it was right about
that time the former child model was offered a job on the long-running,
daytime soap opera, "All My Children," which led to
lead parts in the kids’ films "Harriet the Spy" and
"Inspector Gadget," and, ultimately, her breakout role
as Dawn, Buffy’s kid sister, on the hit TV drama, "Buffy
the Vampire Slayer."

In her new, big-screen family comedy, "Ice Princess,"
the 19-year-old brunette beauty finally gets to finish what she
started when she was 8.

To prepare for her role as Casey Carlyle, a Harvard-bound teen
who puts aside her books to go for the gold, Trachtenberg spent
countless hours in ballet and ice-skating classes over an eight-month
period. Although stunt skaters were employed for some of the
more difficult maneuvers, like double and triple jumps, Trachtenberg
performed most of the on-screen skating herself.

"I knew I was going to have to train a lot," says the
actress, "but I had no idea that it was going to be months
and months of the most intense training sessions, as well as
intense ballet classes, and hours and hours of being on the ice.

"I started from scratch and was trying to accomplish what
my character accomplishes in the movie, which seemed rather impossible
at first. But because I trained so much, I can do a lot of fun
tricks. And when I watch ice skating, I know all the lingo and
I can say, ’She didn’t get enough height in her axel,’ or ’She
flubbed her footwork.’ That’s a cool feeling."

Asked if making "Ice Princess," which co-stars Joan
Cusack and Kim Cattrall, made her feel like maybe she missed
her calling, Trachtenberg assures that she is quite happy in
the relatively safe, warm world of acting.

"I came away from the experience with a respect for skating
and respect for what these people really go through and how hard
they work," she says, noting she also came away with a variety
of bumps, bruises and other minor injuries. "But I’m an
actress first and foremost, so it was cool to step into their
shoes and be a skater, but that’s not what I want to do with
my life. Acting’s my love and my passion."

Confiding that she would love to have a career like Nicole Kidman’s,
Trachtenberg says she thinks it is one’s constant ability to
change that dictates how long she works in Hollywood. (She left
Brooklyn for Los Angeles about seven years ago.)

"After I did ’Buffy,’ I got a lot of [offers to play] that
book-wormy, smart-alecky character and I was like: ’Nope. That’s
not it,’" she explains. "That’s why I did ’EuroTrip.’
A lot of people were like, ’I can’t believe she did a racy teen
comedy.’ Well, that was the point. Breaking out."

After her appearance in "EuroTrip" and her four-episode
stint as a demanding pop star on the acclaimed HBO drama, "Six
Feet Under," Trachtenberg was ready for yet another change
of pace, something sweet and fun like "Ice Princess."

"I had been meaning to do a movie with Disney about girls
being empowered in a really cool, girl-centered story for a while,"
she says. "And they came up to me with a story about ice
skating, so I was like: ’I’ll try my hand at ice-skating. How
hard could it be?’ Little did I know."

In addition to a great part that let her stretch as both an actress
and an athlete, the movie also gave her the opportunity to spend
time with that ice princess who first caught her eye a decade
ago - Michelle Kwan.

"To me, Michelle Kwan was such an awesome figure,"
Trachtenberg says. "When I was younger, I thought she was
just so amazingly graceful and beautiful and to meet her in person,
she was just like the nicest girl ever and we actually got on
the ice together and she was very complimentary of my efforts
in skating, knowing that I had only started recently and she
was just a really, really cool, cool girl. Just like an angel
gliding over the ice."

"Ice Princess" opens March
18 at Regal Entertainment Court Street 12 (106 Court St. between
State and Schermerhorn streets in Brooklyn Heights). Call (718)
246-7995 for screening times and prices.

Reasonable discourse

Comments closed.

First name

Last name

Your neighborhood

Email address

Daytime phone

Your letter must be signed and include all of the information requested above. (Only your name and neighborhood are published with the letter.) Letters should be as brief as possible; while they may discuss any topic of interest to our readers, priority will be given to letters that relate to stories covered by The Brooklyn Paper.

Letters will be edited at the sole discretion of the editor, may be published in whole or part in any media, and upon publication become the property of The Brooklyn Paper. The earlier in the week you send your letter, the better.